![]() ![]() # Since this is a user service, it's not enabled by default, and due to # I probably don't need *all* of these, but why not? # Bitburner uses a bunch of emoji and special characters. Since I don’t really care to spend forever debugging it, it’s likely that I’ll just use python -m rver instead.įor completeness, here’s the NixOS configuration I used for the server: My plan was to point it at the directory I develop Bitburner scripts in so that I could easily fetch them into the game (since there’s an in-game version of wget that lets you download scripts from the internet), rather than needing to copy-paste each one. It’s meant to be for serving the Java version of the VNC client (so people can VNC in from their browsers), but you can point it at any directory you wish. One thing that I tried to get working, but could not, was Xvnc’s built in httpd. This is, of course, very easily adapted to run other idle games, or multiple idle games at once – whether in different VNC sessions or different tabs in the same session. The via is what sets up the SSH tunnel if you’re on the same LAN and comfortable using direct VNC connections you can drop the -localhost from the server and -via from the client and just use vncviewer server:1. Vncviewer -RemoteResize -via -fullscreen localhost:1 The server-side setup, it turns out, is extremely simple: I’m using TigerVNC for this because (a) it’s available in nixpkgs and (b) it supports both RemoteResize and automatic SSH tunneling, but this setup should work with pretty much any VNC server and client, and other clients offer features that might, depending on your setup, be more attractive than SSH tunneling, like client-side scaling. Historically, I’ve avoided VNC because remoting an entire desktop when I really just wanted a single program seemed like overkill, but it can, it turns out, be made fairly minimal. NX has gotten pretty heavyweight since last time I used it, though, and the server isn’t available in nixpkgs. Historically I’ve preferred ssh -XC (for stuff that doesn’t need to stick around) or nxplayer (for stuff that does). The laptop spends less time asleep, but leaving Bitburner (or Trimps or whatever) running noticeably impacts battery life. The desktop spends a lot of time asleep and I’m not often using it. This, of course, means I need a place to run it. This is especially true in Bitburner, where it being online and executing JS is a prerequisite of your programs running at all, and there are major limits to what it can infer about what you “would have done” had it been left running. If you close the browser tab – or in some cases just unfocus it! – it switches to a slow and approximate “offline mode” that only gets you a fraction of whatever progress you would have gotten had you left it running. The big issue with this (and most other games of its ilk) is that you have to keep it running. Since I enjoy programming and generally bail on games like this once they start introducing tedious mechanics that can’t be automated away, I’m sure you can see why a game entirely designed around automating everything with programs might appeal to me. Of late, my poison of choice has been BitBurner, a cyberpunk incremental that is less about playing the game directly and more about writing javascript (or anything else you care to write that compiles to JS) to play the game for you. ![]() I generally prefer the relatively short ones with clearly defined goals and story arcs, like Spaceplan or Paperclips, but I do enjoy larger ones like Trimps or KittensGame on occasion (although I have finished neither of those, and probably never will). I enjoy the occasional idle/incremental game. ![]()
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